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  • are: 1. Getting Ky aboard before we act. 2. See if the Swedish government really would accept the responsibility, if asked by Hanoi and Washington -- and announce it at the time we made the offer. In fact, we might want some Ethiopian, Danish, etc
  • at the time of the Pop• la ■o her• a■klna that yo'll cowd attend the f'llneral of Senator Robert Kennedy •onal repre ■ eatatiY• Warm of Hi ■ Halble••• r•1ard■• Lyndon B. Jobn•on Hi ■ Eminence The Moat Rneread Aqelo Cardinal Vicar General I
  • and internal security of Cameroon. Most African leaders spend half their time trying to hold together a flimsy patchwork of regions and tribes divided along arbitrary colonial boundaries. Cameroon is a classic case. It was a merger of French and British
  • a full opportunity to make alternative suggestions of a positive character. He doesn't have a leg to stand on 1f the situation at that time is clearly presented. W. WWRostow:rln w. Rostow .... h dt s
  • be the hot issu.es next month, but I think that in principle one should always be able to stonewall on the tough ones and use the rest of the time to convey a picture of the President at work for peace. ~--!. ~. McG. B. Please do Please don't - - -- Speak
  • for the time betn,. W.W. Approve Call me Ro■tew ECLAS.II U'D E.O. 12958, Sec. 3.6 LJ ~7-;i_~7 By ~ , NARA Datef:K-o~ 1 ----S~CllET/1;,CDIS L/ --Mr. PreaideDt: Attacbed warm farewell for your approval meaaage It would be delivered OD i• a to KiDg
  • of our effort in the south. (This last sounds like an effort to have it both ways.) 2. I continue to be a strong believer in a December pause, and of course the time is getting shorter every minute. Rusk and McNamara and I plan to review this matter
  • and cool-headed set ·of proposals for this meeting. We can also fend off Soviet propaganda against the MLF as long as we are smart about it. It is true that it would be good to have more time, but this kind of last-minute Soviet acceptance is a standard
  • the Pentagon; that is, all the members of the JCS and the service Secretaries, as well as Clifford and Nitze; -- the Strategic Rese rve call-up (par a. 3) would be announced at the same time as the call-up to support the thirty thousand deployment, but it would
  • and to provide the items and dollar amounts of thle asehtance. The Department ha• concluded that release at thh time of certain of the information of the kind reque ■ted would be prejudicial to the defen ■ e lntere ■h of the United States and that the non-dleclo
  • be cove:re-d at some other time. If you want a full day 1a rest along the route, this could be easily arranged at the half-way point - - Lima·, Peru. The tentative program contains a good mix of popular receptions in big cities with ·v isits to Alliance fo1
  • ; at a critical time you served with 1reat die­ tlnction ae our Ambaaeador to Brazil; you have driven forward the Alliance for Progress over the past years with marked eucceas. As you leave to take up your post 1n Baltimore. the Alllance for Pros.,.ees le ho
  • and in the common right which are being the United with the job of stabilizing to set a time and a place asked own interest and the Soviet the level for for forego the and in the co1nrnon Union to get on of nuclear arms - - in interest. view. We
  • and development O'f relations with the Soviet Union. The leading figures of the United States must take this fact into consideration, and not merely those who now find themselves in power but also those whose names figure in the election campaign. . President Joh
  • America'• aympathy for CncboalovaJda in a D.Clll-political and American ■ ettiag. W. W. Roatow ---- Speak to Jim Jones tentati•ely about a time No ---- Speak to me _ _ __ -· ·•:i~" . ·· • ,. • , ~ T0 B~ :'\}.! f..Dt
  • am, and I think it ls simpler if he simply comes at Max Taylor's invitation ln tho same plane. Moreover, the quick departure which I suggest hardly gives time to get him out to the area ln any other way and, as I say. I am sure that there la no point
  • ChiComs The General Council of the World Federation of Trade Unions (W FT U), meeting in Sofia last week, withdrew the right to speak from the Chinese Communist delegation. The ChiCom delegation leader had attacked the Soviets in violent terms and had
  • \ - 3 - ·the Soviet Union such great responsibilities for the future of man­ kind. If this hope should meet with a positive response from the Soviet Government, it wo-µldbe a great satisfaction to propose definite times and to offer a more formal
  • • of fial ■ hed weapoaa, aad at ladla and Paki ■ taa to d~lop their own the ■ame time -coura1• w•poaa-mekt•1 facillti••• He wW al■ o ar111e that we ahould pall om all the •top■ oa the Hill to 1•t ladla excepted from the Come Arn•ndmeat (wlaldl reqalr•• ua
  • ARCHIVES PROCESSING NOTE You will find two versions of the document withdrawal sheets in this file. The original document withdrawal sheets were completed in the 1970s and early 1980s. Since that time, many of the documents have been declassified
  • was sub-chartered by B-r itisb Petroleum; - - from the Pacific Coast Transport Co. , reportedly holding a time charter; -- from the Barracuda Tanker Co.• the owner, a Liberian corporation. with a Bermuda address; -- with the Union Oil Co. of California
  • . At the same time, the Three Powers will continue to exercise fully their control and authority .. in Berlin as provided for by valid international treaty and practice. The Three Powers expect the Soviet Union to respect all decisions taken pursuant
  • they are careful, "may find themselves in curious position of being more pro-Hanoi than Prime Minister of Soviet Union. 11 3. Significantly, Guardian. which has been major voice opposing U.S. Involvement in Vietnam, today expresses analysis of war which ;,goes much
  • unions are taking steps to help the.. government : · ·· · · A._ ~· and their sister unions in Vietnam ro re.;;ist' Communist aggres:. ·· · sion and at the same time hrin 6 aoout needt:.rl economic and social -. 1
  • re1utions with the United States. They appi::areo to be turning to the we.:;t, rathrr than to the · Soviet Union, ior help in obtain­ ing an Israeli troop withdrawal. Soviet arms 511ipments taperzd oft I · Israeli Lin!! Hardens At •about this• time
  • In trou . there ts everything to be gained by talking now about the one topic, Europe, which holds fair prospect ot some advantage. thrr We.~t or the Soviet Union ti') be Interested 1n th,... Ideas at the present time 1'hcre ts here " h11~,~ . upon which
  • the United States and the Soviet Union as Co-Chairmen of the Eighteen-Nation Disarmament Committee are L g J submitting to the Committee a draft treaty to stop the dangerous spread of nuclear weapons. " (2) He would like to delete the words, "without further
  • of these docu­ ments. At the same time, I believe that the author may well have been familiar with the content of the Gilpatric Report and was almost certainly aware of the current proposals being made in connection with the San Francisco speech. I base the above
  • THE WHITE HOUS E WA S HIN GT ON __ s ECB :u: r-- April li, 1964 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT This folder deals with the tough problem of decisions on export licenses for the Soviet Union which will come before the National Security Council
  • , and tq avoid a shutdown of Ghanaian textile mills, AID proposes to increase the P. L. 480 program. At the same time AID will reserve $5 million of In this way. P. L. 480 will subthe 1968 $15 million program loan. stitute for scarce AID funds. Self-Help
  • the first time wo~ld mean an estimated 300-500 ci,.dl ian casualties in the initial assaults. The irnpact · o•f this action on Hanoi 1 s capacity .to infiltrate materiel into lhe So~th would be entir~ly through the load placed on the i~port' trahsportation
  • action on this contract for the time being inasmuch as the Air Force wants the · aircraft and there is a special background to this matter .,inyol;ving Y,_OJ:lc.J;"::-
  • ,• HE SA ID• RESU:1PTION OF DETENTE WITH MOSCO'.i.1 THUS WAS MADE CONTINGENT, FOR TH£ FIRST TIME, ON THE SOVllT UNION•s WILLINGNESS TO RECOGNIZE THE SOVERIEGNTY AND "PERSONALITY" OF HER NEIGHBORS. . . FRENCH OFFICIALS DESCRIBED THIS AS A DELI3ERATE
  • sentence of the above paragraph. . . , -3. The U.S. Delegation may, at its discretion, point out that the Soviet Union at the present time has deployed a large number of this type of missile which presumably are · targetted at Western Europe. .The United
  • of our White wheat exports ~e also tor cash), . and (b) to a.void undercutting Australla.'e price at a. time vhen the
  • ARCHIVES PROCESSING NOTE You will find two versions of the document withdrawal sheets in this file. The original document withdrawal sheets were completed in the 1970s and early 1980s. Since that time, many of the documents have been declassified
  • to establish a relationship between this reported regiment and one of those believed deploying; however, the coinci_dence in time points toward such a relationship. Each of the deploying and the divisional anti"'.'aircraft divisions battalion is possibly
  • • .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ~ At the same time, however. we &1:-e getting a more modern stockpile better tailored to apecified military miaaiona. 4. The recommended a ~ i l e is within the projected availability of special nuclear materials, and the amnber of new weapons la within AEC